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[email protected] 07-07-2009 11:24 PM

Canning Peppers
 
Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ

Mark Anderson 08-07-2009 01:35 AM

Canning Peppers
 
On Tue, 07 Jul 2009 15:24:31 -0700, wrote:

Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of course
can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook them
through? Thanks for any ideas.


A few years I read up on this and concluded that canning peppers wasn't
for me. You either need to use vinegar to up the acidity or employ a
pressure cooker and be damned sure you know what you're doing or you'll
end up with botulism if you screw up and eat the rotten peppers. Botulism
doesn't just give you diarrhea for a day and that's that, botulism can
literally kill you.

I grow around 80 habenero plants per season and chose to buy a dehydrator
and dry the harvest out and crush them. Just slice them in half, gut the
middle, and place in dehydrator. Wait 12 hours and repeat. It worked out
well and I'm still eating dried peppers from two years ago. After crushed
you can put them in a salt shaker or a pepper grinder or whatever.

Val 08-07-2009 01:36 AM

Canning Peppers
 
I've canned (pickled) peppers for years, also made pepper jelly and pepper
relish. I pack mine raw into the jars when pickling peppers, if this is what
you mean when you say 'canning'. If you'll put 'canning peppers' into Google
you'll get about 335,000 hits on sites that give you recipes and
instructions.

Val
wrote in message
...
Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ




Dan L. 08-07-2009 02:18 AM

Canning Peppers
 
In article
,
" wrote:

Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ


Try the News Group: rec.food.preserving

Many here hangout there - cross poster :)

Enjoy Life ... Dan

--
Garden in Zone 5 South East Michigan.

Billy[_7_] 08-07-2009 05:58 AM

Canning Peppers
 
In article
,
"Dan L." wrote:

In article
,
" wrote:

Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ


Try the News Group: rec.food.preserving

Many here hangout there - cross poster :)

Enjoy Life ... Dan


I looked there, nothing. I had better luck at
http://www.pickyourown.org/canningpeppers.htm
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Frank 08-07-2009 12:43 PM

Canning Peppers
 
On Jul 7, 6:24*pm, "
wrote:
Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do *you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ


My father used to cook them in olive oil and freeze. He liked to eat
peppers and eggs. I guess they would be fine for other dishes. As
others point out, unless you can with vinegar, you would need to
pressure can to prevent botulism.

mj 08-07-2009 01:45 PM

Canning Peppers
 
On Jul 8, 7:43*am, Frank wrote:
On Jul 7, 6:24*pm, "
wrote:

Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do *you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.


MJ


My father used to cook them in olive oil and freeze. *He liked to eat
peppers and eggs. *I guess they would be fine for other dishes. *As
others point out, unless you can with vinegar, you would need to
pressure can to prevent botulism.


Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)

ctlady[_2_] 09-07-2009 12:56 AM

Canning Peppers
 
On Jul 7, 6:24*pm, "
wrote:
Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do *you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ


Why not try freezing them? I freeze my peppers every year. Just
wash, dry, remove the seeds, slice or chop (whatever your choice is)
and place them in a single layer on a cookie sheet. Slip the sheet
into the freezer for a couple of hours and then put them into freezer
bags. This first step of freezing in a single layer prevents them from
sticking all together into one mass of peppers and you can removed
just the amount you want when you need them. They won't be crisp
when thawed but perfect for any kind of cooking.

Pat Kiewicz[_2_] 09-07-2009 11:50 AM

Canning Peppers
 
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)


Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray, then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.


--
Pat in Plymouth MI

"So, it was all a dream."
"No dear, this is the dream, you're still in the cell."

email valid but not regularly monitored



brooklyn1 09-07-2009 03:50 PM

Canning Peppers
 

"Pat Kiewicz" wrote:
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)


Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray, then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.



For long term storage it's best to dehydrate peppers. Frozen fresh peppers
have a freezer shelf life of about 1 year. Home canned peppers have a shelf
life of about 2 years. Dehydrated peppers have a shelf life of about 2
years but increases to about 10 years and longer when frozen. If one has a
glut of say fresh bell peppers from their garden it's best to cook them in a
recipe and then freeze the cooked dish, stuffed peppers freeze well...
freezing fresh raw bell peppers ruins them for using fresh and for using in
most all cooked recipes, even dumped into soup they'll disintergrate
rapidly. Whenever I have a lot of bell peppers from my garden I eat as many
as I can raw in salads and saute in recipes for immediate use and give the
rest away. I really don't see the point in freezing or canning bell
peppers. And hot peppers store best dried. Bell peppers contain so much
moisture that it costs more in energy usage to dry them in a home dehydrater
than to buy them commercially dried. Commercial dehydrating is done in a
vacuum chamber, moisture is literally sucked out while very little heat is
applied, this retains and even intensifies flavor. Home dehydrators
actually waste food, it dries but with very little flavor retained, so
essentially you'll be producing dust. Unless it's a food that can be sun
dried (not many can be) don't bother, home dehydrators are a waste. Most
hot peppers contain little moisture so are very easy to air dry.



Billy[_7_] 09-07-2009 05:52 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Pat Kiewicz" wrote:
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)


Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray, then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.



For long term storage it's best to dehydrate peppers. Frozen fresh peppers
have a freezer shelf life of about 1 year. Home canned peppers have a shelf
life of about 2 years. Dehydrated peppers have a shelf life of about 2
years but increases to about 10 years and longer when frozen. If one has a
glut of say fresh bell peppers from their garden it's best to cook them in a
recipe and then freeze the cooked dish, stuffed peppers freeze well...
freezing fresh raw bell peppers ruins them for using fresh and for using in
most all cooked recipes, even dumped into soup they'll disintergrate
rapidly. Whenever I have a lot of bell peppers from my garden I eat as many
as I can raw in salads and saute in recipes for immediate use and give the
rest away. I really don't see the point in freezing or canning bell
peppers. And hot peppers store best dried. Bell peppers contain so much
moisture that it costs more in energy usage to dry them in a home dehydrater
than to buy them commercially dried. Commercial dehydrating is done in a
vacuum chamber, moisture is literally sucked out while very little heat is
applied, this retains and even intensifies flavor. Home dehydrators
actually waste food, it dries but with very little flavor retained, so
essentially you'll be producing dust. Unless it's a food that can be sun
dried (not many can be) don't bother, home dehydrators are a waste. Most
hot peppers contain little moisture so are very easy to air dry.


In repost to the deranged idiot above,
http://www.i4at.org/surv/soldehyd.htm
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Bill who putters 09-07-2009 06:31 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article
,
Billy wrote:

In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Pat Kiewicz" wrote:
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)

Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray, then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.



For long term storage it's best to dehydrate peppers. Frozen fresh peppers
have a freezer shelf life of about 1 year. Home canned peppers have a
shelf
life of about 2 years. Dehydrated peppers have a shelf life of about 2
years but increases to about 10 years and longer when frozen. If one has a
glut of say fresh bell peppers from their garden it's best to cook them in
a
recipe and then freeze the cooked dish, stuffed peppers freeze well...
freezing fresh raw bell peppers ruins them for using fresh and for using in
most all cooked recipes, even dumped into soup they'll disintergrate
rapidly. Whenever I have a lot of bell peppers from my garden I eat as
many
as I can raw in salads and saute in recipes for immediate use and give the
rest away. I really don't see the point in freezing or canning bell
peppers. And hot peppers store best dried. Bell peppers contain so much
moisture that it costs more in energy usage to dry them in a home
dehydrater
than to buy them commercially dried. Commercial dehydrating is done in a
vacuum chamber, moisture is literally sucked out while very little heat is
applied, this retains and even intensifies flavor. Home dehydrators
actually waste food, it dries but with very little flavor retained, so
essentially you'll be producing dust. Unless it's a food that can be sun
dried (not many can be) don't bother, home dehydrators are a waste. Most
hot peppers contain little moisture so are very easy to air dry.


In repost to the deranged idiot above,
http://www.i4at.org/surv/soldehyd.htm


We used to dry peppers then freeze them. Now our dehydrator used
exclusively for fruit. Apples, peaches and a rare pineapple if the
price is right. This all aimed at getting ready for Christmas. I
married a Swede. Dark winter with a hint of summer goes well as a gift
or stewed with ice cream. Never dried rhubarb but should be a given.

Bill whose electrical dehydrator works in about 48 hours. Sort of like
slow and steady won the race. Once wrote about a Latvian friend whose
dad smoked eel in a old ice box then dried it further in a discarded old
clean car. Went well with vodka and laughter .

--

Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA

http://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/

Leon Fisk 09-07-2009 08:05 PM

Canning Peppers
 
On Wed, 8 Jul 2009 16:56:06 -0700 (PDT), ctlady
wrote:

snip
Why not try freezing them? I freeze my peppers every year. Just
wash, dry, remove the seeds, slice or chop (whatever your choice is)
and place them in a single layer on a cookie sheet. Slip the sheet
into the freezer for a couple of hours and then put them into freezer
bags. This first step of freezing in a single layer prevents them from
sticking all together into one mass of peppers and you can removed
just the amount you want when you need them. They won't be crisp
when thawed but perfect for any kind of cooking.


They don't stick together all that bad. I've never had any
trouble separating them after freezing in zip lock bags.
Could be maybe my hands are a bit stronger too :)

Wash them off, core/remove seeds and any bad spots, slice
into strips maybe an inch or so wide. Shove into large (2
gallon work nice) freezer bag, freeze. Use for cooking, they
will be mushy/limp when they thaw out. I've kept them in a
chest freezer for a year or so without any troubles.

--
Leon Fisk
Grand Rapids MI/Zone 5b
Remove no.spam for email

brooklyn1 09-07-2009 08:41 PM

Canning Peppers
 

"Billy" wrote in message
...
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Pat Kiewicz" wrote:
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)

Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray,
then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.



For long term storage it's best to dehydrate peppers. Frozen fresh
peppers
have a freezer shelf life of about 1 year. Home canned peppers have a
shelf
life of about 2 years. Dehydrated peppers have a shelf life of about 2
years but increases to about 10 years and longer when frozen. If one has
a
glut of say fresh bell peppers from their garden it's best to cook them
in a
recipe and then freeze the cooked dish, stuffed peppers freeze well...
freezing fresh raw bell peppers ruins them for using fresh and for using
in
most all cooked recipes, even dumped into soup they'll disintergrate
rapidly. Whenever I have a lot of bell peppers from my garden I eat as
many
as I can raw in salads and saute in recipes for immediate use and give
the
rest away. I really don't see the point in freezing or canning bell
peppers. And hot peppers store best dried. Bell peppers contain so much
moisture that it costs more in energy usage to dry them in a home
dehydrater
than to buy them commercially dried. Commercial dehydrating is done in a
vacuum chamber, moisture is literally sucked out while very little heat
is
applied, this retains and even intensifies flavor. Home dehydrators
actually waste food, it dries but with very little flavor retained, so
essentially you'll be producing dust. Unless it's a food that can be sun
dried (not many can be) don't bother, home dehydrators are a waste. Most
hot peppers contain little moisture so are very easy to air dry.


In repost to the deranged idiot above,
http://www.i4at.org/surv/soldehyd.htm



RU Nutz... that fercocktah rube goldberg won't dehydrate fruit before they
rot... your billygoat brain is dehydrated, like a freakin' lychee nut! LOL



brooklyn1 09-07-2009 09:01 PM

Canning Peppers
 

"Bill who putters" wrote

We used to dry peppers then freeze them. Now our dehydrator used
exclusively for fruit. Apples, peaches and a rare pineapple


It's not possible to dehydrate pineapple at home for less than it costs to
buy it already dehydrated... not unless you live where pineapple is grown,
and then why bother.. the dehy pineapple one buys in market is dried in
pineapple growing countries becaue it would be stupid to ship heavy
pineapple when it costs much less to ship already dried. Actually it's not
possible to dehydrate statside pineapple before it rots because to ship it
needs to be harvested long before fully ripe, and because it doesn't contain
enough sugar to keep from rotting in the drying process. There are no field
ripened pineapple in stateside markets, and pineapple does not ripen further
once picked. I think you're full of billygoat poopoo... you just made all
that up... you never made a raisin. Anytime someone begins a claim with
"We" then ya gotta know here comes a lie... WE usta, that's barroom
boasting, that's likker tawkin'. Just like I caught you last time, you are
a patent LIAR... you can't help yourself, you have a disease.




Billy[_7_] 09-07-2009 09:25 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Billy" wrote in message
...
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Pat Kiewicz" wrote:
mj said:

Thanks everyone. We found the book last night and it does call for
vinegar. We also have a pressure caner. That being said I think we are
going to blanch and freeze. Right now I have a Laundry tub full of
peppers waiting for me to recover from weeding. ;)

Peppers don't need to be blanched before freezing. Just do as "ctlady"
said in her post: freeze cut up peppers in a single layer on a tray,
then
put them into freezer bags for long term storage.



For long term storage it's best to dehydrate peppers. Frozen fresh
peppers
have a freezer shelf life of about 1 year. Home canned peppers have a
shelf
life of about 2 years. Dehydrated peppers have a shelf life of about 2
years but increases to about 10 years and longer when frozen. If one has
a
glut of say fresh bell peppers from their garden it's best to cook them
in a
recipe and then freeze the cooked dish, stuffed peppers freeze well...
freezing fresh raw bell peppers ruins them for using fresh and for using
in
most all cooked recipes, even dumped into soup they'll disintergrate
rapidly. Whenever I have a lot of bell peppers from my garden I eat as
many
as I can raw in salads and saute in recipes for immediate use and give
the
rest away. I really don't see the point in freezing or canning bell
peppers. And hot peppers store best dried. Bell peppers contain so much
moisture that it costs more in energy usage to dry them in a home
dehydrater
than to buy them commercially dried. Commercial dehydrating is done in a
vacuum chamber, moisture is literally sucked out while very little heat
is
applied, this retains and even intensifies flavor. Home dehydrators
actually waste food, it dries but with very little flavor retained, so
essentially you'll be producing dust. Unless it's a food that can be sun
dried (not many can be) don't bother, home dehydrators are a waste. Most
hot peppers contain little moisture so are very easy to air dry.


In repost to the deranged idiot above,
http://www.i4at.org/surv/soldehyd.htm



RU Nutz... that fercocktah rube goldberg won't dehydrate fruit before they
rot... your billygoat brain is dehydrated, like a freakin' lychee nut! LOL


You have a cite for that, you prurient, anti-Christian windbag?
Either the dehydrator, my brain, and/or the lychee nut?
Lychees are commonly sold fresh in Vietnamese, Chinese and Asian
markets, and in recent years, also widely in supermarkets worldwide.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lychee
Com'on, Sickness, whadda ya got?
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Billy[_7_] 09-07-2009 09:32 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Bill who putters" wrote

We used to dry peppers then freeze them. Now our dehydrator used
exclusively for fruit. Apples, peaches and a rare pineapple


It's not possible to dehydrate pineapple at home for less than it costs to
buy it already dehydrated...


Hey, Sickness, can I get a cite? I don't see where Bill said it was
cheaper? I can probably buy anything that I grow in my garden cheaper at
the market, so what's your point? That's presuming that you have a
point, and aren't just having another one of your fits. Get help.
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Bill who putters 09-07-2009 09:35 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

"Bill who putters" wrote

We used to dry peppers then freeze them. Now our dehydrator used
exclusively for fruit. Apples, peaches and a rare pineapple


It's not possible to dehydrate pineapple at home for less than it costs to
buy it already dehydrated... not unless you live where pineapple is grown,
and then why bother.. the dehy pineapple one buys in market is dried in
pineapple growing countries becaue it would be stupid to ship heavy
pineapple when it costs much less to ship already dried. Actually it's not
possible to dehydrate statside pineapple before it rots because to ship it
needs to be harvested long before fully ripe, and because it doesn't contain
enough sugar to keep from rotting in the drying process. There are no field
ripened pineapple in stateside markets, and pineapple does not ripen further
once picked. I think you're full of billygoat poopoo... you just made all
that up... you never made a raisin. Anytime someone begins a claim with
"We" then ya gotta know here comes a lie... WE usta, that's barroom
boasting, that's likker tawkin'. Just like I caught you last time, you are
a patent LIAR... you can't help yourself, you have a disease.


It is not just a matter of cost if you can believe that. Ripe warm
moist sugar dried slow is I'd guess much better than kiln dried. Add a
bit of cinnamon or clove and it becomes fun/

We = Family practice.

Mr. Hyde

Bill

--

Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA

http://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/

Billy[_7_] 09-07-2009 09:38 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

billygoat poopoo...

?
Uh, Sickness, we don't talk like that around here. Your inspiration may
be coming from your Depens. Maybe you should just just go home and play
with your frozen banana.
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Bill who putters 09-07-2009 09:54 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article
,
Billy wrote:

In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

billygoat poopoo...

?
Uh, Sickness, we don't talk like that around here. Your inspiration may
be coming from your Depens. Maybe you should just just go home and play
with your frozen banana.


This guy with the sexual references takes me back to 5th grade.

Immature Moron with empty compassion . SAD.

Bill

--

Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA

http://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/

brooklyn1 09-07-2009 10:02 PM

Canning Peppers
 

"Billy" wrote:
we don't talk like that around here.


There's that pinochio nose "we" again, yet another barroom braggart LIAR!



Billy[_7_] 09-07-2009 10:25 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article
,
Billy wrote:

In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

billygoat poopoo...

?
Uh, Sickness, we don't talk like that around here. Your inspiration may
be coming from your Depens. Maybe you should just just go home and play
with your frozen banana.


Sickness, last time I was called a "poopoo" head, my assailant was 4
years old.
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

enigma 10-07-2009 02:07 PM

Canning Peppers
 
Bill who putters wrote in
:

It is not just a matter of cost if you can believe that. Ripe
warm
moist sugar dried slow is I'd guess much better than kiln dried.
Add a bit of cinnamon or clove and it becomes fun/


got some notes on drying pineapple you can share? sounds like a fun
project (& a break from apples).
lee

Bill who putters 10-07-2009 02:36 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
enigma wrote:

Bill who putters wrote in
:

It is not just a matter of cost if you can believe that. Ripe
warm
moist sugar dried slow is I'd guess much better than kiln dried.
Add a bit of cinnamon or clove and it becomes fun/


got some notes on drying pineapple you can share? sounds like a fun
project (& a break from apples).
lee


I use a nine shelf dehydrator which is electric. Each shelf 16 about
16X18 inches. Set temp for 135 F.

Remove pineapple skin and the core. Slice about half inch thick. Do
plain or marinade in juice like raspberry or dust with cinnamon etc.

Run 8 hour and check as your dew point may vary.

We do mostly peach, apples, nectarines and pineapple as a rare treat.

Store in a dry clean glass jar in a day place. Fill only 1/2 way as
moisture can be resorbed and that is not good. Should last 2 years.

Makes good gifts.

Bill

http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/foodnut/09309.html

PS I never do this.

"Pretreat fruit pieces by dipping in an ascorbic acid, citric acid,
lemon juice or sodium metabisulfite solution"

--

Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA

http://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/

Bill who putters 10-07-2009 05:13 PM

Canning Peppers
 
In article ,
Bill who putters wrote:

In article ,
enigma wrote:

Bill who putters wrote in
:

It is not just a matter of cost if you can believe that. Ripe
warm
moist sugar dried slow is I'd guess much better than kiln dried.
Add a bit of cinnamon or clove and it becomes fun/


got some notes on drying pineapple you can share? sounds like a fun
project (& a break from apples).
lee


I use a nine shelf dehydrator which is electric. Each shelf 16 about
16X18 inches. Set temp for 135 F.

Remove pineapple skin and the core. Slice about half inch thick. Do
plain or marinade in juice like raspberry or dust with cinnamon etc.

Run 8 hour and check as your dew point may vary.

We do mostly peach, apples, nectarines and pineapple as a rare treat.

Store in a dry clean glass jar in a day place. Fill only 1/2 way as
moisture can be resorbed and that is not good. Should last 2 years.

Makes good gifts.

Bill

http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/foodnut/09309.html

PS I never do this.

"Pretreat fruit pieces by dipping in an ascorbic acid, citric acid,
lemon juice or sodium metabisulfite solution"


Mistake not 16 should be 9 shelves.

Bill Air movement important so a low oven not good.

--

Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA

http://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/

Billy[_7_] 11-07-2009 06:29 AM

Canning Peppers
 
In article , Charlie wrote:

On Thu, 09 Jul 2009 16:54:28 -0400, Bill who putters
wrote:

In article
,
Billy wrote:

In article ,
"brooklyn1" wrote:

billygoat poopoo...
?
Uh, Sickness, we don't talk like that around here. Your inspiration may
be coming from your Depens. Maybe you should just just go home and play
with your frozen banana.


This guy with the sexual references takes me back to 5th grade.

Immature Moron with empty compassion . SAD.

Bill


The ShelGinRummy is gettin' you guys' goat, whatever the hell that old
saying means.

Perhaps his inspiration maybe coming from the gin bottle? SAD.

Charlie


I guess being crazy is just having an itch you can't scratch:O(
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

[email protected] 12-07-2009 03:16 PM

Canning Peppers
 
very good advice. I would add that freezing works really well too. Ingrid

On Tue, 07 Jul 2009 19:35:02 -0500, Mark Anderson wrote:
A few years I read up on this and concluded that canning peppers wasn't
for me. You either need to use vinegar to up the acidity or employ a
pressure cooker and be damned sure you know what you're doing or you'll
end up with botulism if you screw up and eat the rotten peppers. Botulism
doesn't just give you diarrhea for a day and that's that, botulism can
literally kill you.

I grow around 80 habenero plants per season and chose to buy a dehydrator
and dry the harvest out and crush them. Just slice them in half, gut the
middle, and place in dehydrator. Wait 12 hours and repeat. It worked out
well and I'm still eating dried peppers from two years ago. After crushed
you can put them in a salt shaker or a pepper grinder or whatever.

Somewhere between zone 5 and 6 tucked along the shore of Lake Michigan
on the council grounds of the Fox, Mascouten, Potawatomi, and Winnebago

gardenplanters 23-07-2009 10:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by (Post 855031)
Does anyone know how to can peppers? We did some last year and of
course can't find the book. Do you blanch them or do you have to cook
them through? Thanks for any ideas.

MJ

Hello ,
I read up on this and concluded that canning peppers wasn't
for me. You either need to use vinegar to up the acidity or employ a
pressure cooker and be damned sure you know what you're doing or you'll
end up with botulism if you screw up and eat the rotten peppers. Botulism
doesn't just give you diarrhea for a day and that's that, botulism can
literally kill you.


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